A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review: Where, What, How and Who?

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review : Where, What, How and Who? / Bagger, Christoffer.

The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection. ed. / Kristoffer Albris; Karin Fast; Faltin Karlsen; Anne Kaun; Stine Lomborg; Trine Syvertsen. Nordicom, 2024.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bagger, C 2024, A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review: Where, What, How and Who? in K Albris, K Fast, F Karlsen, A Kaun, S Lomborg & T Syvertsen (eds), The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection. Nordicom.

APA

Bagger, C. (2024). A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review: Where, What, How and Who?. Manuscript submitted for publication In K. Albris, K. Fast, F. Karlsen, A. Kaun, S. Lomborg, & T. Syvertsen (Eds.), The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection Nordicom.

Vancouver

Bagger C. A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review: Where, What, How and Who? In Albris K, Fast K, Karlsen F, Kaun A, Lomborg S, Syvertsen T, editors, The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection. Nordicom. 2024

Author

Bagger, Christoffer. / A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review : Where, What, How and Who?. The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection. editor / Kristoffer Albris ; Karin Fast ; Faltin Karlsen ; Anne Kaun ; Stine Lomborg ; Trine Syvertsen. Nordicom, 2024.

Bibtex

@inbook{f109e6a493a547c38325d978a84bb5b2,
title = "A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review: Where, What, How and Who?",
abstract = "The backlash against digital media has manifested in everyday practices of media refusal and non-use. This chapter seeks to create an overview of the last decade of empirical disconnection research, tracing both its overarching tendencies and its boundaries. This is done through an analysis of 348 empirical studies on digital disconnection. For the purposes of this chapter, digital disconnection is defined by a research ethos which does not see the act of disconnection as something to be remedied. In review, the typical interest of the research has been in studying relatively young and individualized agents{\textquoteright} disconnection from social media, and often in a temporary manner. Therefore, the discussion portion of the chapter considers the opportunity for the openness of digital disconnection studies to extend even further, with particular emphasis on structures and contexts where disconnection may not only be problematized by the imperatives of “always on” communication, specifically in working life. ",
author = "Christoffer Bagger",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
editor = "Kristoffer Albris and Karin Fast and Faltin Karlsen and Anne Kaun and Stine Lomborg and Syvertsen, {Trine }",
booktitle = "The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection",
publisher = "Nordicom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - A Decade of Digital Disconnection Research in Review

T2 - Where, What, How and Who?

AU - Bagger, Christoffer

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - The backlash against digital media has manifested in everyday practices of media refusal and non-use. This chapter seeks to create an overview of the last decade of empirical disconnection research, tracing both its overarching tendencies and its boundaries. This is done through an analysis of 348 empirical studies on digital disconnection. For the purposes of this chapter, digital disconnection is defined by a research ethos which does not see the act of disconnection as something to be remedied. In review, the typical interest of the research has been in studying relatively young and individualized agents’ disconnection from social media, and often in a temporary manner. Therefore, the discussion portion of the chapter considers the opportunity for the openness of digital disconnection studies to extend even further, with particular emphasis on structures and contexts where disconnection may not only be problematized by the imperatives of “always on” communication, specifically in working life.

AB - The backlash against digital media has manifested in everyday practices of media refusal and non-use. This chapter seeks to create an overview of the last decade of empirical disconnection research, tracing both its overarching tendencies and its boundaries. This is done through an analysis of 348 empirical studies on digital disconnection. For the purposes of this chapter, digital disconnection is defined by a research ethos which does not see the act of disconnection as something to be remedied. In review, the typical interest of the research has been in studying relatively young and individualized agents’ disconnection from social media, and often in a temporary manner. Therefore, the discussion portion of the chapter considers the opportunity for the openness of digital disconnection studies to extend even further, with particular emphasis on structures and contexts where disconnection may not only be problematized by the imperatives of “always on” communication, specifically in working life.

M3 - Book chapter

BT - The Digital Backlash and the Paradoxes of Disconnection

A2 - Albris, Kristoffer

A2 - Fast, Karin

A2 - Karlsen, Faltin

A2 - Kaun, Anne

A2 - Lomborg, Stine

A2 - Syvertsen, Trine

PB - Nordicom

ER -

ID: 282493395